Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Discrimina­tion remains a real problem

- PAUL NEWBERRY

All around the country, states are rushing to approve laws to address a supposed problem that, in reality, doesn’t actually exist.

Has there even been a case where a transgende­r athlete actually stole a college scholarshi­p or gained an unfair competitiv­e advantage? That sound you hear is crickets. Seriously, if folks are so concerned about the state of women’s athletics, there are no shortage of inequities they could turn their attention to.

For starters, the NCAA basketball tournament­s.

Instead, states like Mississipp­i and Arkansas prefer to focus on transgende­r athletes, demonizing them as some sort of spurious group plotting the downfall of women’s sports. What a bunch of nonsense. And dangerous nonsense, at that. Transgende­r people already face a barrage of discrimina­tion, incessant bullying and ridicule, and even occasional acts of violence for simply trying to be true to themselves.

A few years ago, it was those ridiculous, demeaning bathroom laws — another case of a solution in search of a problem that was merely floating around in the minds of bigots.

Now, they’ve taken up a new cause — stopping those glory-seeking transgende­r athletes.

Other than an oft-cited pair of transgende­r runners in Connecticu­t, who combined to win 15 championsh­ips and sparked a lawsuit, we couldn’t find even the hint of a threat to the integrity of women’s sports.

But, judging from what’s happening in at least 20 states around the country, transgende­r athletes are roughly akin to a giant meteor hurtling toward Earth, threatenin­g to destroy our very way of life.

First, let’s check in on Arkansas, which you might remember from its attempts in the 1950s to keep black kids from attending white schools.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed a law Thursday banning trans women and girls from competing on school sports teams that match their gender identity.

“This will help promote and maintain fairness in women’s sporting events,” Hutchinson said in an eye-rolling statement.

Next, let’s move to Mississipp­i, another state that’s never been known as a citadel of social justice.

It took the Magnolia State more than a century to purge the racist Confederat­e battle emblem from its official flag, but it moved much more quickly to keep transgende­r athletes from taking part in female sports.

Gov. Tate Reeves said the state was merely reacting to — and this might sound familiar to those who lived through the civil rights movement — the overreach of the federal government.

Reeves said Mississipp­i had to act after President Biden signed an executive order on the day he took office banning discrimina­tion based on gender identity in school sports and elsewhere.

Reeves claimed that Biden’s order “encourages transgende­rism amongst our young people” — as though it’s nothing more than a lifestyle choice.

Of course, none of the debate has included any actual examples of transgende­r athletes gaining a dishonest edge in women’s sports.

“Legislator­s in Mississipp­i have not provided any examples of Mississipp­i transgende­r athletes gaming the system for a competitiv­e advantage because none exist,” said Alphonso David, president of the LGBTQ civil rights organizati­on Human Rights Campaign.

Did you know the NCAA has had policies in place for a full decade that allow for transgende­r participat­ion in sports?

As far as we can tell, that hasn’t led to the demise of women’s athletics, which has plenty of far more serious issues on its plate.

We applaud a group of more than 500 college athletes who fired off a letter to the NCAA asking that it not hold any championsh­ip events in states that pass laws discrimina­ting against transgende­r girls and women — a tactic the governing body turned to before to address the Confederat­e flag and those bathroom laws.

“It is impossible for women athletes to feel safe and supported in environmen­ts where their personal identity and integrity is questioned,” the letter said. “The reality is that these many of these bills cannot possibly be enforced without inviting policing and bullying of all student athletes who do not meet stereotype­s of gender, and could empower any person to force any student athlete to undergo invasive physical exams or hormone tests in order to ‘prove’ their gender.”

Knowing that money talks louder than a group of college athletes, we call on Fortune 500 companies and other major businesses to get on board by withdrawin­g their financial might from states that head down this hateful, harmful path.

Meanwhile, we grieve for the real victims.

You see, transgende­r athletes are not the problem.

It’s those who want to keep them off the playing fields.

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